4.6 Article

CFHTLenS: Galaxy bias as function of scale, stellar mass, and colour Conflicts with predictions by semi-analytic models

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 646, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202038119

Keywords

gravitational lensing: weak; cosmology: observations; large-scale structure of Universe; galaxies: evolution

Funding

  1. Collaborative Research Center TR33 'The Dark Universe'
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SI 1769/1-1]
  3. Canadian Space Agency
  4. NSERC Research Tools and Instruments grant program

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By testing two semi-analytic models with data from the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Lensing Survey (CFHTLenS), a study found that galaxy bias increases with scale and stellar mass, and shows color dependency. Despite reasonable agreement on relative changes with scale and galaxy properties, there is a clear conflict for the galaxy bias factor b(k) without model preference.
Galaxy models predict a tight relation between the clustering of galaxies and dark matter on cosmological scales, but predictions differ notably in the details. We used this opportunity and tested two semi-analytic models by the Munich and Durham groups with data from the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Lensing Survey (CFHTLenS). For the test we measured the scale-dependent galaxy bias factor b(k) and correlation factor r(k) from linear to non-linear scales of k approximate to 10 h Mpc(-1) at two redshifts 0.35 z C 0.35 , 0.51 for galaxies with stellar mass between 5x10(9) and 3 x 10(11)h(70)(-2) M-circle dot 3 x 10 11 SPX h 70 - 2 0.1667 M circle dot Our improved gravitational lensing technique accounts for the intrinsic alignment of sources and the magnification of lens galaxies for better constraints for the galaxy-matter correlation r(k). Galaxy bias in CFHTLenS increases with k and stellar mass; it is colour-dependent, revealing the individual footprints of galaxy types. Despite a reasonable model agreement for the relative change with both scale and galaxy properties, there is a clear conflict for b(k) with no model preference: the model galaxies are too weakly clustered. This may flag a model problem at z greater than or similar to 0.3 for all stellar masses. As in the models, however, there is a high correlation r(k) between matter and galaxy density on all scales, and galaxy bias is typically consistent with a deterministic bias on linear scales. Only our blue and low-mass galaxies of about 7 x 10(9)h(70)(-2) M-circle dot 7 x 10 9 9.02 h 70 - 2 M circle dot at 0.51 z false 0.51 show, contrary to the models, a weak tendency towards a stochastic bias on linear scales where r(ls)=0.75 +/- 0.14 (stat.)+/- 0.06 (sys.). This result is of interest for cosmological probes, such as E-G, that rely on a deterministic galaxy bias. We provide Monte Carlo realisations of posterior constraints for b(k) and r(k) in CFHTLenS for every galaxy sample in this paper at the CDS.

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